The Morphology of Local Galaxies and the Basis of the Hubble Sequence

The goal of galaxy classification is to understand the physical basis for the wide range in shapes and structures exhibited by galaxies in the local and high redshift universe. We present a catalog of visually classified galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey with detailed morphological classifi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nair, Preethi
Other Authors: Abraham, Roberto
Language:en_ca
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Bar
AGN
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/17806
id ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-17806
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spelling ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-178062013-04-19T19:52:51ZThe Morphology of Local Galaxies and the Basis of the Hubble SequenceNair, PreethiGalaxy MorphologyBarRingLensAGNBimodality0606The goal of galaxy classification is to understand the physical basis for the wide range in shapes and structures exhibited by galaxies in the local and high redshift universe. We present a catalog of visually classified galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey with detailed morphological classifications including bars, rings, lenses, tails, warps, dustlanes, arm flocculence and multiplicity (so called ’fine structure’). This thesis explores the importance of galaxy morphology by probing its relationship to physical properties. Our analysis includes an investigation of correlations between fine structures and AGN activity. This sample defines a comprehensive local galaxy sample which we use to study the low redshift universe both qualitatively and quantitatively. We find the stellar mass appears to be a defining characteristic of a galaxy. The break in most correlations of physical properties with morphology is due to a lack of late type, massive disk galaxies. Our analysis of the size-mass relations of galaxies as a function of morphology (T-Type) has revealed many interesting connections. We find the size-mass relation of Sa, Sab, Sb, and Sbc galaxies bifurcates into two families of objects as one moves down the sequence such that the high concentration branch exhibits a similar slope to low concentration early type (E) galaxies suggesting a closer than expected physical (possibly evolutionary) connection between the two populations. We find bar fraction is bimodal with respect to mass (at 3 x 10^10 M) and color (at g - r ∼ 0.55). The dependence is seen to intimately depend on central concentration such that objects below the transition mass with low concentrations have a higher bar fraction than objects above the transition mass which have high bar fractions for high concentration systems. In addition we find the presence of an AGN alters the behavior and abundance of barred/ringed galaxies in the high mass peak such that the bar/ring fractions increase with mass in nonactive galaxies whereas they decrease with mass in active galaxies. AGN fractions are also decreasing in the same mass range possibly implying a positive correlation between fine structure and ring formation.Abraham, Roberto2009-062009-09-25T14:51:22ZNO_RESTRICTION2009-09-25T14:51:22Z2009-09-25T14:51:22ZThesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/17806en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Galaxy Morphology
Bar
Ring
Lens
AGN
Bimodality
0606
spellingShingle Galaxy Morphology
Bar
Ring
Lens
AGN
Bimodality
0606
Nair, Preethi
The Morphology of Local Galaxies and the Basis of the Hubble Sequence
description The goal of galaxy classification is to understand the physical basis for the wide range in shapes and structures exhibited by galaxies in the local and high redshift universe. We present a catalog of visually classified galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey with detailed morphological classifications including bars, rings, lenses, tails, warps, dustlanes, arm flocculence and multiplicity (so called ’fine structure’). This thesis explores the importance of galaxy morphology by probing its relationship to physical properties. Our analysis includes an investigation of correlations between fine structures and AGN activity. This sample defines a comprehensive local galaxy sample which we use to study the low redshift universe both qualitatively and quantitatively. We find the stellar mass appears to be a defining characteristic of a galaxy. The break in most correlations of physical properties with morphology is due to a lack of late type, massive disk galaxies. Our analysis of the size-mass relations of galaxies as a function of morphology (T-Type) has revealed many interesting connections. We find the size-mass relation of Sa, Sab, Sb, and Sbc galaxies bifurcates into two families of objects as one moves down the sequence such that the high concentration branch exhibits a similar slope to low concentration early type (E) galaxies suggesting a closer than expected physical (possibly evolutionary) connection between the two populations. We find bar fraction is bimodal with respect to mass (at 3 x 10^10 M) and color (at g - r ∼ 0.55). The dependence is seen to intimately depend on central concentration such that objects below the transition mass with low concentrations have a higher bar fraction than objects above the transition mass which have high bar fractions for high concentration systems. In addition we find the presence of an AGN alters the behavior and abundance of barred/ringed galaxies in the high mass peak such that the bar/ring fractions increase with mass in nonactive galaxies whereas they decrease with mass in active galaxies. AGN fractions are also decreasing in the same mass range possibly implying a positive correlation between fine structure and ring formation.
author2 Abraham, Roberto
author_facet Abraham, Roberto
Nair, Preethi
author Nair, Preethi
author_sort Nair, Preethi
title The Morphology of Local Galaxies and the Basis of the Hubble Sequence
title_short The Morphology of Local Galaxies and the Basis of the Hubble Sequence
title_full The Morphology of Local Galaxies and the Basis of the Hubble Sequence
title_fullStr The Morphology of Local Galaxies and the Basis of the Hubble Sequence
title_full_unstemmed The Morphology of Local Galaxies and the Basis of the Hubble Sequence
title_sort morphology of local galaxies and the basis of the hubble sequence
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/17806
work_keys_str_mv AT nairpreethi themorphologyoflocalgalaxiesandthebasisofthehubblesequence
AT nairpreethi morphologyoflocalgalaxiesandthebasisofthehubblesequence
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